The selected answer here is a really nice solution, but it has one severe bug which is apparent in the original JS fiddle (http://jsfiddle.net/bgrins/tzYbU/): try dragging the longest row (God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater), and the rest of the cell widths collapse.
This means that fixing the cell widths on the dragged cell is not enough - you also need to fix widths on the table.
$(function () {
$('td, th', '#sortFixed').each(function () {
var cell = $(this);
cell.width(cell.width());
});
$('#sortFixed tbody').sortable().disableSelection();
});
JS Fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/rp4fV/3/
This fixes the problem of the table collapsing after you drag the first column, but introduces a new one: if you change the content of the table the cell sizes are now fixed.
To work around this when adding or changing content you would need to clear the widths set:
$('td, th', '#sortFixed').each(function () {
var cell = $(this);
cell.css('width','');
});
Then add your content, then fix widths again.
This still isn't a complete solution, as (especially with a table) you need a drop placeholder. For that we need to add a function on start that builds the placeholder:
$('#sortFixed tbody').sortable({
items: '> tr',
forcePlaceholderSize: true,
placeholder:'must-have-class',
start: function (event, ui) {
// Build a placeholder cell that spans all the cells in the row
var cellCount = 0;
$('td, th', ui.helper).each(function () {
// For each TD or TH try and get it's colspan attribute, and add that or 1 to the total
var colspan = 1;
var colspanAttr = $(this).attr('colspan');
if (colspanAttr > 1) {
colspan = colspanAttr;
}
cellCount += colspan;
});
// Add the placeholder UI - note that this is the item's content, so TD rather than TR
ui.placeholder.html('<td colspan="' + cellCount + '"> </td>');
}
}).disableSelection();
JS Fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/rp4fV/4/